Speaking Events
Entertaining & Useful Sessions To Support Your Organization
Entertaining & Useful Sessions To Support Your Organization
The following sessions generate large turnout from retirees, students, professionals, and other groups that benefit from the life-altering power of an amazing memory. If you represent a retirement community, university, company, or conference, contact us today to arrange a memorable and transformative experience for your people.
The Five Fundamentals Of Memory Improvement
Learn about the five fundamental principles you can apply to maximize your memory immediately. This session is strongly recommended for retirement communities, which have experienced record turnout.
How To Remember Everyone's Name
Learn how to remember names and faces easily using memory techniques. Attendees will be able to walk into a room full of new people and learn all of their names. Especially recommended for sales teams, retirement communities, and conferences. For conferences, this session is best scheduled at the beginning to allow attendants to socialize and network better during the event.
How To Learn 4 Years Of French In 3 Months
Learn cutting-edge memory techniques for language acquisition. In a single summer, Leland advanced four years in his understanding of the French language, leveled up from French 1 to French 5, and received the highest possible score (5) on the AP exam. Leland will discuss this experience and teach the group the foundations for doing this yourself with any language.
How To Transform Your Education With Memory Techniques
Learn about how memory techniques improve academic performance, and the strategies your audience can use to fit more learning into less time. Leland regularly works with medical students at Johns Hopkins, language students, and law students to help improve their performance and studying process.
What others are saying about LB Memory's Speaking Events:
"LB Memory offers an engaging experience that leaves viewers in awe of their new memory capabilities. Leland showed a password and a list of words to the audience at the beginning of his talk and asked how many people thought they could remember them. No one raised their hand. At the end of the talk, he showed the audience the same password and list and asked how many people thought they could memorize both...all hands in the room went up."